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Recently Played

A Luz de Yayá - A Luz de Yayá - Single by Coladera
A Luz de Yayá - Single | Coladera
Duration
4:03
Duration
4:03
Algo contigo - Imagina by Rita Payés & Elisabeth Roma
Imagina | Rita Payés & Elisabeth Roma
Duration
4:57
Duration
4:57
Oh Honey - Oh Honey - Single by Delegation
Oh Honey - Single | Delegation
Duration
5:56
Duration
5:56
Cherry - Lust for Life by Lana Del Rey
Lust for Life | Lana Del Rey
Duration
3:00
Duration
3:00
P.I.M.P. - Get Rich or Die Tryin' (Bonus Track Version) by 50 Cent
Get Rich or Die Tryin' (Bonus Track Version) | 50 Cent
Duration
4:09
Duration
4:09
Stop the World I Wanna Get Off With You - Why'd You Only Call Me When You're High? - Single by Arctic Monkeys
Why'd You Only Call Me When You're High? - Single | Arctic Monkeys
Duration
3:08
Duration
3:08
I Only Have Eyes for You - Flamingo Serenade by The Flamingos
Flamingo Serenade | The Flamingos
Duration
3:22
Duration
3:22
My Band - D12 World by D12
D12 World | D12
Duration
4:58
Duration
4:58
TO FEEL ALIVE - TO FEEL ALIVE - EP by Kali Uchis
TO FEEL ALIVE - EP | Kali Uchis
Duration
2:57
Duration
2:57
angel - TO FEEL ALIVE - EP by Kali Uchis
TO FEEL ALIVE - EP | Kali Uchis
Duration
2:23
Duration
2:23

Recently Added

Blessed - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
Blessed
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Bangerz N Mash - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
Bangerz N Mash
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April Showers Bring May Flowers  - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
April Showers Bring May Flowers
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Ambiente - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
Ambiente
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A Luz De Yayá - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
A Luz De Yayá
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2020 - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
2020
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14/08/2021  - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
14/08/2021
Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others

Recommendations

Heavy Rotation Mix - The tracks you can’t get enough of lately, all in one place. Updated as you listen.
Heavy Rotation Mix
The tracks you can’t get enough of lately, all in one place. Updated as you listen.
New Music Mix - Discover new music from artists we think you'll like. Refreshed every Friday.
New Music Mix
Discover new music from artists we think you'll like. Refreshed every Friday.
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TO FEEL ALIVE - EP
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Frank Ocean Essentials - It’s not just that he’s an enigma or that he follows his own clock. It’s not even his style (which seems invincible), or the fact that he’s one of the few pop artists publicly navigating the frontiers of queer identity. It’s that Frank Ocean is one of those songwriters who manages to touch new and distant places in his audience’s imagination, a cartographer of intimacy and confession so intrepid and sensitive that listening to him can feel like eavesdropping on something private, maybe even inexpressible. Yet here he is, expressing it. Even in his early days as the quiet one in the LA hip-hop collective Odd Future, Ocean seemed possessed by a stoicism and emotional intelligence that was uncommon, luminous—the kind of guy who sees more than he says and doesn’t waste a word when he opens his mouth. <br>
Ocean was raised mostly in New Orleans, and moved to Los Angeles in the mid-2000s; by 2009, he’d landed a contract with Def Jam, but couldn’t square the relationship with his ambitions and ended up releasing his first mixtape, 2011’s <i>Nostalgia, Ultra</i>, on his own. He was soulful, funny, understated and poetic, the kind of writer who made fragments of the real world—a girl doing porn to cover tuition (“Novacane”), a dip in the ocean (“Swim Good”)—crackle with mystical significance. <br>
From Kanye, Jay-Z and Beyoncé on down, he gained a cult of followers. In 2012, he released <i>Channel ORANGE</i>, which veered from Stevie Wonder-style soul to string-led gospel and psychedelia, framing R&B as a kind of rarified art music. The writing got sharper, too—at once more pitiless (“Crack Rock”), more expressive (“Bad Religion”) and more surreal (“Pyramids”), weaving storytelling and social commentary with an offhand brilliance that has become Ocean’s trademark sleight of hand. After a four-year period during which news of his next move flitted around in the internet ether like myth, Ocean released two projects in a week, in August 2016: the visual album <i>Endless</i> and the more conventionally framed <i>Blonde</i>. If <i>Channel ORANGE</i> had sounded like Ocean opening up, <i>Blonde</i> marked a contraction, exploring meditations and internal monologue with a sound that often felt more like ambient music than R&B. In the few years following <i>Blonde</i>, Ocean shared a string of singles through his Apple Music show, <i>blonded RADIO</i>, each one its own miniature event. Whether turning inward or outward, Ocean continues to explore.
Frank Ocean Essentials
It’s not just that he’s an enigma or that he follows his own clock. It’s not even his style (which seems invincible), or the fact that he’s one of the few pop artists publicly navigating the frontiers of queer identity. It’s that Frank Ocean is one of those songwriters who manages to touch new and distant places in his audience’s imagination, a cartographer of intimacy and confession so intrepid and sensitive that listening to him can feel like eavesdropping on something private, maybe even inexpressible. Yet here he is, expressing it. Even in his early days as the quiet one in the LA hip-hop collective Odd Future, Ocean seemed possessed by a stoicism and emotional intelligence that was uncommon, luminous—the kind of guy who sees more than he says and doesn’t waste a word when he opens his mouth. <br> Ocean was raised mostly in New Orleans, and moved to Los Angeles in the mid-2000s; by 2009, he’d landed a contract with Def Jam, but couldn’t square the relationship with his ambitions and ended up releasing his first mixtape, 2011’s <i>Nostalgia, Ultra</i>, on his own. He was soulful, funny, understated and poetic, the kind of writer who made fragments of the real world—a girl doing porn to cover tuition (“Novacane”), a dip in the ocean (“Swim Good”)—crackle with mystical significance. <br> From Kanye, Jay-Z and Beyoncé on down, he gained a cult of followers. In 2012, he released <i>Channel ORANGE</i>, which veered from Stevie Wonder-style soul to string-led gospel and psychedelia, framing R&B as a kind of rarified art music. The writing got sharper, too—at once more pitiless (“Crack Rock”), more expressive (“Bad Religion”) and more surreal (“Pyramids”), weaving storytelling and social commentary with an offhand brilliance that has become Ocean’s trademark sleight of hand. After a four-year period during which news of his next move flitted around in the internet ether like myth, Ocean released two projects in a week, in August 2016: the visual album <i>Endless</i> and the more conventionally framed <i>Blonde</i>. If <i>Channel ORANGE</i> had sounded like Ocean opening up, <i>Blonde</i> marked a contraction, exploring meditations and internal monologue with a sound that often felt more like ambient music than R&B. In the few years following <i>Blonde</i>, Ocean shared a string of singles through his Apple Music show, <i>blonded RADIO</i>, each one its own miniature event. Whether turning inward or outward, Ocean continues to explore.
Hot Pink
Doja Cat
Tracks
12
Tracks
12
good kid, m.A.A.d city (Deluxe)
Tracks
19
Tracks
19
Invasion of Privacy
Tracks
13
Tracks
13

Playlists

A Luz De Yayá - null
A Luz De Yayá
Tracks
22
Tracks
22

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